Skittles: Telekinize the Rainbow

Skittles: Telekinize the Rainbow

You look at a single Skittle on a white surface, and it starts to move. The moment plays like telekinesis, the illusion that your mind can move an object. It is not a visual trick on a screen. It is a live feed of real Skittles being nudged around in the real world.

Skittles Australia and Clemenger BBDO build this as a Facebook experience because, as the case frames it, only a small minority of fans engage with a brand’s page after liking it. The goal is to make “like” feel like a superpower, not a dead end.

The trick is not mind control. It is eye control

The mechanism is webcam tracking plus a physical rig. Your eye movements, captured via webcam, are translated into commands sent to Wi-Fi-controlled robots attached to Skittles, so the candy moves in response to where you look.

In global consumer brands on social platforms, “engagement” only scales when interaction feels immediate and personal.

The real question is whether your activation turns a passive like into an active loop in under ten seconds.

In social platforms, turning passive likes into active participation usually comes down to one thing. Give people an interaction loop that feels immediate, personal, and worth showing to someone else.

Why it lands

It creates a clean “I need to try this” reaction in seconds. The live camera feed removes skepticism, and the physical motion makes the experience feel bigger than a typical Facebook app. It also bakes in a share-worthy narrative: the fan is not consuming content. The fan is controlling a real object.

Extractable takeaway: If you want engagement rather than reach, stop asking for attention and start granting control. A tiny moment of viewer control, tied to a brand asset, can outperform bigger content drops because the audience feels like the protagonist.

Campaign write-ups report that users spent an average of around four minutes interacting with the experience, and that page growth and app ranking spiked during the run.

What to steal for your next social activation

  • Make the mechanic visible. Live proof beats claims. If the audience can see it is real, they trust it faster.
  • Turn the brand into the interface. Here the “UI” is literally the product. That keeps the experience on-brand without extra messaging.
  • Design for one-person amazement and second-person sharing. The first user is impressed. The second user wants to replicate it.
  • Keep the loop short. Look. Move. React. Repeat. The faster the feedback, the longer people stay.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Telekinize the Rainbow?

A Facebook experience that lets people move real Skittles through eye movements captured by a webcam, with the motion executed by Wi-Fi-controlled robotics.

Is it actually mind control?

No. The “telekinesis” framing is the story. The control signal is eye movement, translated by software into physical movement.

Why is the live webcam feed important?

It proves the effect is happening in real space, which makes the experience feel more magical and more credible than a purely on-screen interaction.

Do you need eye tracking to borrow the pattern?

No. The transferable pattern is a tight input-to-output loop where the audience action clearly changes what they see, fast enough to feel like “power,” not a UI.

What is the main risk in copying this approach?

If setup friction is high or latency is noticeable, the illusion collapses. Experiences built on “power” need instant response to feel real.

McDonald’s Free WiFi: Turning SSIDs into Ads

McDonald’s Free WiFi: Turning SSIDs into Ads

In Spain, McDonald’s offers free WiFi to all its customers. Since the WiFi signal reaches quite far, customers in surrounding restaurants also tend to use the McDonald’s network.

So McDonald’s decided to attract new customers via their own WiFi network. They simply changed the signal’s name into a message and embedded a promotion into it.

The simplest media channel you already own

This is a tiny idea with a very clear mechanism. A WiFi network name is a broadcast surface. That name is the SSID, the label devices show in the network list. It shows up exactly when people are deciding where to sit, what to order, or whether to move.

Instead of treating WiFi as utility, McDonald’s treated it as a micro-channel for demand capture.

Why the WiFi name works as advertising

In high-footfall retail settings where people scan for quick utility, the WiFi list becomes a decision interface and the SSID becomes a tiny billboard in that interface.

Extractable takeaway: When people already scan a utility list, naming inside that list can outperform bigger media because it meets intent at the moment of choice.

  • High intent moment. People looking for WiFi are already in “connect me now” mode.
  • Local reach. The signal spills into nearby venues, where potential switchers sit.
  • Zero-click visibility. You see the message before you even connect.
  • Low cost, repeatable. Updating an SSID is simple, fast, and scalable.

Where this crosses from clever to strategic

The real question is whether you treat owned infrastructure as a distribution channel, or just as a cost line.

The strategic move is not the pun. It is the use of owned infrastructure as a distribution channel. When your message sits inside a system people actively scan for, you reduce friction and increase the odds of action.

This is worth doing wherever you run guest WiFi and can keep the message instantly understandable.

It is also a reminder that not all “digital” has to be an app. Sometimes it is just naming.

What to take from this if you run retail or CX

  1. Audit your hidden touchpoints. SSIDs, receipts, kiosks, queue screens, packaging, all are media surfaces.
  2. Message at the decision point. Proximity channels work best when they align with immediate behavior.
  3. Keep the offer instantly understandable. People scan lists quickly. Clarity beats cleverness.
  4. Test and rotate. Like any channel, vary the message to learn what actually moves footfall.

A few fast answers before you act

What did McDonald’s do with its free WiFi in Spain?

It changed the WiFi network name into a message and embedded a promotional offer into the SSID to attract people nearby who could see the network on their devices.

Why does the WiFi signal matter here?

Because it reaches beyond the restaurant itself, meaning people in surrounding venues can still see and use the network, making it a local acquisition channel.

What is an SSID in this context?

It is the WiFi network name that appears in a device’s list of available networks. Changing it changes what people see before connecting.

Is this a “growth hack” or a real marketing tactic?

It is both. It is a lightweight tactic, but it is grounded in a real channel. Owned infrastructure that reaches potential customers at a high-intent moment.

What is the transferable lesson for brands?

Look for owned, ambient digital surfaces where people already scan for utility, then place a clear message there that can drive immediate action.

Media Markt “Money Trucks”

Media Markt “Money Trucks”

A security team clears the street in a quiet neighborhood. Neighbors step outside. Then a tiny convoy rolls in. 193 miniature “money trucks”, each loaded with 1-cent coins, drives up to the winner’s home and unloads one million cents into a growing pile in the driveway. It is a cash delivery staged like a movie scene, except the payoff is real.

The idea in one line

Celebrate a social milestone by turning “one million” into a physical spectacle people can watch, share, and retell.

What Media Markt does to mark 1 million Facebook fans

Over the last couple of years I have seen a handful of brands reach the 1 million fans milestone. To celebrate, most of them create really nice and innovative thank-you videos. A good example is Tic Tac “Likes” Matt. Media Markt hits the same milestone, but takes a very different route. It turns the number into a physical stunt people can watch, share, and retell.

Media Markt on reaching 1 million fans on Facebook launched a contest: “How many small trucks do you need to transport 1,000,000 cents?” The activation was created by Ogilvy & Mather Frankfurt.

The business intent is simple: turn a fan milestone into participatory attention that travels beyond the Facebook page itself.

How the campaign plays out

Step 1. Start with a guess that feels simple and sticky

The mechanic is deliberately basic: one question, one number, one prize framed as a million small units. It is easy to participate, and easy to share.

Step 2. Make the prize physically absurd

The winner does not receive a bank transfer. She receives €10,000 as 1-cent coins, delivered using the exact number of miniature trucks the contest asks people to estimate.

Step 3. Turn delivery into content

The delivery is filmed as a “cash-in-transit” moment: security clearing streets, convoy arriving, coins dumped into a heap. The documentation becomes the story asset that travels beyond Facebook.

In retail and mass-market marketing, milestone campaigns travel further when the audience can see the scale in the real world, not just read the number on a screen.

The numbers that make it feel “earned”

  • The correct answer is 193 trucks.
  • The winner is in Saßmicke (western Germany), and the stunt is played as a neighborhood event, not a private handover.

Why it works

This works because the mechanic turns an abstract fan count into a visible, countable spectacle people can grasp in seconds.

Extractable takeaway: If a brand milestone matters to you, convert it into a physical event with one simple unit people can instantly understand and retell.

It converts an online number into a physical reality

“One million fans” is abstract. One million coins is instantly legible, and the convoy makes the number feel even bigger.

The stunt is engineered for repeatable media beats

Announcement. Guessing phase. Winner selection. Convoy “journey” updates. Final delivery video. The campaign creates multiple moments people can follow, not one single post.

It is brand-consistent in one glance

Electronics retail competes in a world of deals and hype. This behaves like a deal, but acts like a story. The spectacle fits the loud, “big gesture” brand posture without needing product claims.

The deeper point

The real question is how to turn a passive social milestone into a public event people want to witness and retell.

This is a better move than another thank-you video because it makes participation and spectacle do the distribution work.

If you want people to care about a community milestone, do not announce the number. Stage the number. Make it participatory, then make the payoff visual enough that the community wants to distribute it for you.

How to stage a milestone people retell

  • Turn a milestone into a game: “1 million fans” becomes a concrete challenge with one guessable number.
  • Make the prize a proof object: Delivering “1 million cents” as physical trucks makes the claim visual and press-friendly.
  • Use a single, memorable unit: “Cents” is simple. People instantly understand the scale without explanation.
  • Let the reveal be the content: The answer plus the delivery moment is the story, not a brand speech.
  • Design for retelling: If someone can summarize it in one sentence, it will travel.

A few fast answers before you act

What is the campaign mechanic?

A Facebook contest asks fans to guess how many miniature trucks are needed to transport one million cents.

What is the actual prize?

€10,000 delivered as 1,000,000 one-cent coins, transported by 193 miniature trucks.

Why does the “193 trucks” detail matter?

Because it closes the loop. The answer is not just “correct”. It becomes the logistics and the spectacle of the payout.

Who creates the campaign?

Ogilvy & Mather Frankfurt.

What is the reusable pattern?

Turn a social milestone into a simple prediction game, then make the reward delivery so visual that it becomes the main distribution asset.